View allAll Photos Tagged pathologist
Aaron Smith (Central Oregon Forest Insect and Disease Service Center) with tree failure.
Photo by: Kristen Chadwick
Date: July 27, 2006
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Kristen Chadwick collection; Sandy, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Rotten white fir wildlife tree - broken off at the top. Helen Maffei ( pathologist, Central Oregon Service Center). Lake of the Woods, Oregon.
Photo by: Kristen Chadwick
Date: c.2006
Photo credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Kristen Chadwick collection; Sandy, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Explore #407 7/22/09
Tomorrrow an MD Anderson appointment with the speech pathologist and then we're heading to Louisiana! Family time. Wish me luck though. I'll be the driver, with Had the passenger. It could be ugly!
Forest pathologist Jim Hadfield gathers information during a hazard tree evaluation by sounding the tree with a rubber mallet. Sounding can rapidly provide information about a tree's structural condition.
Photo by: Unknown
Date: c.2010
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Wenatchee Forest Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Ten Lessons I Have Learned About Hazard Rating Trees by Jim Hadfield: www.fs.fed.us/foresthealth/technology/htwc/2010/Docs/06-H...
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
PEARL HARBOR (May 27, 2015) Flight Officer. Chrystal Jones, Pathologist, Australian Air Force, interacts with Sailors on the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH 19) for Pacific Partnership 2015. Now in its tenth iteration, Pacific Partnership is the largest annual multilateral humanitarian assistance and disaster relief preparedness mission conducted in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region. While training for crisis conditions, Pacific Partnership missions have provided medical care to approximately 270,000 patients and veterinary services to more than 38,000 animals. Additionally, Pacific Partnership has provided critical infrastructure development to host nations through the completion of more than 180 engineering projects.(U.S. Air Force photo by Technical Sergeant Araceli Alarcon /RELEASED)
Villa Della Porta Bozzolo is a villa located at Casalzuigno in the Italian province of Varese. It was donated by the heirs of the Italian senator and pathologist Camillo Bozzolo to the Fondo per l'Ambiente Italiano—the National Trust of Italy—who now manage it
It was built in the 16th century and used as a rural villa and later an aristocratic residence. In the 18th century an impressive Italian garden was added with stairs, fountains, water features and an aedicula decorated with frescoes. Around the villa there are interesting rustic elements, such as a representation of an olive press containing a cycle of rococo frescoes from the workshop of Pietro Antonio Magatti, a painter from Varese.
At the end of the 17th century the villa experienced one of its most important transformations on the initiative of Gian Angelo Della Porta III on the occasion of his marriage to Isabella, daughter of Count Giorgio Giulini. With the assistance of an unknown architect, he set the main axis of the garden parallel to the side of the house—thus contravening the classic rules under which the principal axis must be aligned with the main room of the house, dividing the garden into two symmetrical parts. In 1723, he also built an elaborate fountain, designed by the architect Pellegatta.
Warning: Several photographs in this set contain images of an actual human autopsy.
In this award-winning human anatomy program for grades 10 and up, students follow a videotape of an actual human autopsy accompanied by live narration from an Ohio State University pathology resident, in this case, Dr. Sean Kirby, with COSI educator Kyle Jepson facilitating.
Students must take careful notes during the procedure, work through the "case," and solve for cause of death.
Schools from across the United States and beyond connect to COSI for this program. During the program pictured here, schools from four states participated, including Ohio, New Jersey, New York, and Wisconsin.
COSI's "In Depth: Autopsy" received a Gold Muse Award from the American Association of Museums for two-way interactive programming.
The autopsy is shown from the Y-incision to the removal of the brain and is 90-minutes long. Teens, adults, and community groups are welcome. Individual tickets are available for non-school audiences and individuals to watch from COSI's Galaxy Theater.
Teachers are sent a kit of materials prior to the program. In the kit, teachers will find materials to conduct both pre- and post-visit activities along with booklets for students to use during the program. "In-Depth: Autopsy" is supported by NYLF.
COSI is Columbus, Ohio's dynamic Center of Science and Industry. For more information, please visit www.cosi.org.
Pathologist Mary Lou Fairweather (Region 3, Arizona Zone, Forest Health Protection). 7th Western Hazard Tree Workshop field trip. Sedona, Arizona.
"Field trip to higher elevation areas toward Flagstaff. Bring your hard hat and appropriate field gear! Tentative Agenda: 1) Deicing salt-caused mortality = hazard tree development along highways/roadways; 2) Travel management rule and hazard tree liability; 3) Why you don't want to live in an aspen grove; and 4) Ski areas and hazard tree issues."
For the complete workshop agenda see: www.fs.fed.us/foresthealth/technology/htwc/2013/agenda.htm
Photo by: Kristen Chadwick
Date: May 16, 2013
Photo credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Kristen Chadwick collection; Sandy, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Gary Widmer, Ryan Widmer's father listens to testimony by Dr. Michael Balko, a forensic pathologist during the 14th day of Ryan's murder trial in Judge Neal Bronson's Warren County courtroom.
This is the third time Ryan Widmer has been to trial in the death of his wife Sarah Widmer. The first two were mistrials. He is accused of drowning her in their bathtub in 2008. Photo shot Thursday February 10, 2011. The Enquirer/Cara Owsley
Plant pathologist Holly Kearns (left) discusses tree decay during hazard tree training. Olympic National Forest, Washington.
For more see Field Guide for Hazard-Tree Identification and Mitigation on Developed Sites in Oregon and Washington Forests (2014) here: www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprd3799993.pdf
Photo by: Kristen Chadwick
Date: June 6, 2013
Photo credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Kristen Chadwick collection; Sandy, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Field meeting with Forest Service and Oregon Department of Forestry entomologists and pathologists looking at balsam woolly adelgid damage in subalpine fir.
Photo by: Richard Sniezko
Date: May 12, 2004
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.
Source: DRGC digital photo collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Villa Della Porta Bozzolo is a villa located at Casalzuigno in the Italian province of Varese. It was donated by the heirs of the Italian senator and pathologist Camillo Bozzolo to the Fondo per l'Ambiente Italiano—the National Trust of Italy—who now manage it
It was built in the 16th century and used as a rural villa and later an aristocratic residence. In the 18th century an impressive Italian garden was added with stairs, fountains, water features and an aedicula decorated with frescoes. Around the villa there are interesting rustic elements, such as a representation of an olive press containing a cycle of rococo frescoes from the workshop of Pietro Antonio Magatti, a painter from Varese.
At the end of the 17th century the villa experienced one of its most important transformations on the initiative of Gian Angelo Della Porta III on the occasion of his marriage to Isabella, daughter of Count Giorgio Giulini. With the assistance of an unknown architect, he set the main axis of the garden parallel to the side of the house—thus contravening the classic rules under which the principal axis must be aligned with the main room of the house, dividing the garden into two symmetrical parts. In 1723, he also built an elaborate fountain, designed by the architect Pellegatta.
THF44283
Smith was a pathologist at the hospital. Rogge described himself as a lumberjack from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. He was part of an advance team sent to Fordlandia to prepare for receiving the first equipment and other materials sent to establish the city. Rogge became assistant manager of Fordlandia, and later plantation manager. Pringle, a former sheriff of Kalamazoo, MI, was also part of the advance team. He became a foreman at Fordlandia. Kennedy was an accountant sent to Brazil with cash to purchase the land for Fordlandia.
Greg Filip photographing decay on disc. Hemlock Fomes annosus study.
Photo by: Unknown
Date: 1977
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.
Collection: Region 6, Forest Health Protection slide collection; Regional Office, Portland, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Plant pathologist John Ohman, operating an autoclave. Northern Hardwoods Laboratory, Marquette, Michigan.
Photo by: Bluford Muir
Date: May 1964
Image Credit: National Archives and Records Administration
Series: Photographs Relating to National Forests, Resource Management Practices, Personnel, and Cultural and Economic History, ca. 1897 - ca. 1980
Record Group 95: Records of the Forest Service, 1870 - 2008
Local Identifier: 95-GP-5966-506949
Forest Service Image: 506949
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Pathologist Brent Oblinger examines root disease damage. Deschutes National Forest, Oregon.
Photo by: Rob Flowers
Date: July 15, 2016
Photo credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Central Oregon Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Rob Flowers collection. Bend, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
www.carecareers.com.au's newest TV ad is about Talia, a young girl with cerebral palsy. With the support of a team of allied health professionals Talia has achieved a number of her goals, including going to high school. View the ad on www.youtube.com/carecareers
Ellen Goheen (Forest Pathologist, Southwest Oregon Forest Insect and Disease Service Center) speaking at the Dorena Genetic Resource Center's 50th anniversary celebration. Cottage Grove, Oregon.
Photo by: Richard Sniezko
Date: August 25, 2016
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.
Source: Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.
From the news release for the event:
"The USDA Forest Service’s Dorena Genetic Resource Center is celebrating 50 years of serving as a regional service center for Pacific Northwest tree and plant genetics.
Dorena GRC houses disease-resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and a national tree climbing program for the Forest Service. Their program is known internationally as a world leader in development of populations of trees with genetic resistance to non-native diseases.
The public is invited to the 50th celebration on Thursday, August 25 at the Cottage Grove-based center located 34963 Shoreview Road. The Open House and public tours are scheduled from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Tours of the center will include:
Genetic Resistance Trials
Inoculation ‘Fog’ Chamber
Tree Improvement Activities of Grafting, Pollination, & Seed Production
Port-Orford-cedar Containerized Orchards
Native Species Plant Development
Seed and Pollen Processing
Tree Climbing
A special guest at the event will be Jerry Barnes, the first manager at Dorena when established in 1966. All guests will be able to enjoy viewing informative posters about the programs and activities at the Center. ..."
For more see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/umpqua/news-events/?cid=FSEPRD513088
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Plant pathologist Ken J. Kessler, Jr., examines a finished slide under the microscope. Northern Hardwoods Laboratory, Marquette, Michigan.
Photo by: Bluford Muir
Date: May 13, 1964
Image Credit: National Archives and Records Administration
Series: Photographs Relating to National Forests, Resource Management Practices, Personnel, and Cultural and Economic History, ca. 1897 - ca. 1980
Record Group 95: Records of the Forest Service, 1870 - 2008
Local Identifier: 95-GP-5966-506948
Forest Service Image: 506948
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Tissue samples come with forms that explain where they came from and any observations that the doctor may have had.
Pilot Paul Larson, contract pilot with Eagle Flight Services, and WDNR forest pathologist and aerial observer Melanie Kallas. Aerial detection survey.
Photo by: Unknown
Date: 2003
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.
Source: Aerial Survey Program collection.
For geospatial data collected during annual aerial forest insect and disease detection surveys see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/forest-grasslandhealth/insects-...
For related historic program documentation see:
archive.org/details/AerialForestInsectAndDiseaseDetection...
Johnson, J. 2016. Aerial forest insect and disease detection surveys in Oregon and Washington 1947-2016: The survey. Gen. Tech. Rep. R6-FHP-GTR-0302. Portland, OR: USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection. 280 p.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Sarah works with speech and hearing pathologist Kate Harrison and her 'talker,' a picture-oriented communication device that vocalizes sentences that Sarah puts together.
© Colleen Harrison
Accompanying multimedia project: vimeo.com/25308501
Full thesis/book project: www.blurb.com/books/2236939
L-R: Jim Russell (Air Quality), Paul Dunham (kneeling - Forest Health Monitoring), Bob Bachman (Air Quality), and Greg Filip (Forest Pathologist) with the USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Forest Health Protection staff in Portland, Oregon.
Photo by: Julie Johnson
Date: c.2005
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.
Source: Forest Health Protection digital file collection. Portland, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
In this photo, Quest Coordinating Producer Amy Miller and world-renown plant pathologist and SOD researcher Matteo Garbelotto look at some of the tanoak acorns Professor Garbelotto is studying for possible genetic resistance to SOD.
Image Source: Sheraz Sadiq
FYI - you can view the companion KQED TV piece on the QUEST website and discuss it in the QUEST Science Blog.
Plant pathologist Kristen Chadwick discusses tree decay during hazard tree training. Olympic National Forest, Washington.
For more see Field Guide for Hazard-Tree Identification and Mitigation on Developed Sites in Oregon and Washington Forests (2014) here: www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprd3799993.pdf
Photo by: Kristen Chadwick
Date: June 6, 2013
Photo credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Kristen Chadwick collection; Sandy, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Senyu Chen, plant pathologist. Soybean cyst nematode disease research at the University of Minnesota's Southern Research and Outreach Center, Waseca. Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station project #05-027, "Host Resistance as the Cornerstone for Managing Plant-parasitic Nematodes in Sustainable Agroecosystems," principal investigator: Senyu Chen.
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so for about the last 6 or so years i've based my life around going to college to become a forensic pathologist.......
thats 6 years down the drain
i was thinking i don't think i would be able to handle knowing the people im operating on could be a mother a friend a brother....that someone out there loved them....and now there laying on a cold table while im cutting into them trying to find out how they were killed
i love forensics and the thought of helping a family cope with loved ones death and giving them a piece of mind...but i dont wont to be the person who tells them how they died
and ive came to love photography with a burning passion
so ive decided to go to school for photography and business management...
and even if i don't make it into the photography business i would still have the management degree to fall back on
so ya.....
these are my business cards